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Jupiter Moons Mission: JUICE Spacecraft To Launch In 2022, European Space Agency Says

Posted: 05/04/2012 10:12 am Updated: 05/04/2012 10:12 am

Jupiter Moons
In this image provided by NASA Thursday Dec. 18, 2008 the Hubble Space Telescope has caught Jupiter's moon Ganymede playing a game of "peek-a-boo."

By: SPACE.com Staff
Published: 05/03/2012 12:57 PM EDT on SPACE.com

The European Space Agency will launch a deep-space mission to explore the icy moons of Jupiter in 2022, agency officials announced Tuesday (May 2).

The ambitious space mission, called the Jupiter Icy moons Explorer (JUICE), is expected to reach Jupiter in 2030 and spend at least three years studying the gas giant's major moons, ESA officials said.

The JUICE mission to Jupiter is the first major mission selected by ESA under the agency's Cosmic Vision 2015-2025 program. It beat out two other proposed missions; a space observatory to hunt gravity waves and an advanced high-energy astrophysics telescope.

"Jupiter is the archetype for the giant planets of the Solar System and for many giant planets being found around other stars," said Alvaro Giménez Cañete, ESA's director of Science and Robotic Exploration, in statement. "JUICE will give us better insight into how gas giants and their orbiting worlds form, and their potential for hosting life." [Best Missions to Explore Jupiter]

The JUICE spacecraft is a solar-powered orbiter that will spend seven-and-a-half years cruising to Jupiter after its launch. Once at its destination, the probe will study Jupiter's atmosphere and magnetosphere, and investigate how the so-called Galilean moons (Callista, Europa, Ganymede and Io) interact with the gas giant, ESA officials said.

The mission is expected to cost about $1.1 billion (870 million euros). According to its mission plan, the JUICE probe is expected to conduct an extensive survey of Jupiter's largest moons.

The spacecraft will take a close look at the crater-covered Callisto, the most battered object in the solar system, and fly by the icy moon Europa twice. At Europa, JUICE is expected to record the first-ever measurements of the moon's icy crust, and seek out potential landing sites for future missions, ESA officials said.

In 2032, the JUICE probe will enter orbit around Ganymede, which is Jupiter's largest moon and the biggest moon around any planet in our solar system. Ganymede is the only moon in the solar system known to harbor its own magnetic field. The JUICE mission aims to study that magnetic field, as well as map the moon's icy surface and probe its interior structure, which may conceal a subsurface ocean, ESA officials said.

ESA's Cosmic Vision 2015-2025 program aims to develop space missions that seek to better understand how planets form and what conditions allow life to arise. Its main goals also include investigating how the solar system works, the fundamental laws of the universe, as well as how the universe began in the first place and what it is made of, according to an ESA description.

The decision to pick the JUICE probe from among the three finalists for the first Large Class (or L-class) mission was a tough one, ESA officials added. The selection process officially began in 2007.

"It was a difficult decision to choose one mission from three excellent candidates. All three would produce world-class science and put Europe at the forefront of space research," Giménez Cañete said. "JUICE is a necessary step for the future exploration of our outer solar system."

The next call for new ESA L-class candidate missions to explore the solar system is expected in 2013.

JUICE is not the only new mission aimed at the planet Jupiter. NASA's Juno mission launched toward the planet in August 2011 and is expected to arrive at Jupiter in 2016.

Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

Copyright 2012 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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By: SPACE.com Staff Published: 05/03/2012 12:57 PM EDT on SPACE.com The European Space Agency will launch a deep-space mission to explore the icy moons of Jupiter in 2022, agency officials announc...
By: SPACE.com Staff Published: 05/03/2012 12:57 PM EDT on SPACE.com The European Space Agency will launch a deep-space mission to explore the icy moons of Jupiter in 2022, agency officials announc...
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plans includingdog
what a nice day.
08:18 PM on 05/10/2012
Europa for the win.It is the best moon candidate for habitability.The icy shell may not be that thick.Tidal heating and Rossby waves will keep it warm along with radioactive heating.Ganymede to some extent but Callisto not so much in tidal heating and radioactive decay.
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rg9rts
Carpe Diem! This aint rehearsal
08:29 PM on 05/08/2012
And when they get there the Chinese will greet them personally. ~~(^..^)
09:32 AM on 05/05/2012
Europa sounds like a European Space Agency's property.
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Riverman
The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars,
04:50 PM on 05/06/2012
Actually there are a few water moons out there. Don’t forget Enceladus.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enceladus_(moon)
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Johnangry
Outrageous statements spark good convo!!
08:53 PM on 05/06/2012
Don't forget Ceres either. I wonder why no one talks about that one.
04:32 AM on 05/05/2012
Europa has liquid water on, only body with Earth to have liquid in our solar system. Lets see what is under the ice of Europa, maybe something swimming around? I hope I didn't confuse Europa with a different moon. Exciting if we find life outside Earth. Europa has liquid water, heat source from Jupiter, and its been like that as long as it took life to develop on Earth. Look up Neil Degrasse Tyson for a better explanation than I can give.
10:03 AM on 05/05/2012
You are not confused, Europa is the right moon!

We believe Europa may have a liquid water ocean beneath its icy crust, but we aren't certain. We think this may possible there are not many craters visible on the surface which suggests the ice is soft enough beneath the surface to close them. It's possible that gravitational tidal heating softens the ice enough to create liquid water.

There's a roadblock, however. The ice crust may be anywhere from 10 to 50 km thick which would make it extremely difficult to penetrate the crust in order to reach the liquid water ocean(s). Hopefully we can find an area where the ice crust is much thinner, so we can get to the ocean(s) and find out if life has ever existed there!
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Opus Fideo
Atheist. Social Democrat. Canadian.
09:50 PM on 05/05/2012
Well, how about all of the cracks that occur all over the place? The entire reason there is liquid water is also the reason why the ice cracks: the gravitational pull of Jupiter is so intense that it generates heat, and causes the ice to crack, and also allows some of the water to remain liquid.

Theoretically, they could just orbit the moon, map out the surface until they find a nice big crack and then shoot a probe into it (get your mind out of the gutter! this is science ;-)
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Riverman
The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars,
04:55 PM on 05/06/2012
Actually there are a few water moons out there. Don’t forget Enceladus.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enceladus_(moon)

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Ignore all of this as I am just adding words so the system will allow me to attach this post to the comment that I meant to reply to.
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ZombyWoof
Who's Tom Joad?
10:49 PM on 05/04/2012
ALL THESE WORLDS ARE YOURS EXCEPT EUROPA....
ATTEMPT NO LANDINGS THERE.
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loudneighbor
Now %10 Quieter
11:42 AM on 05/07/2012
I miss Arthur C Clarke.
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Scott Allie
Starving Philosopher
09:47 PM on 05/07/2012
You, Sir are not alone. F&F
06:31 PM on 05/04/2012
Europe has $1billion to cruise around in space? Ha ha ha!
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Johnangry
Outrageous statements spark good convo!!
08:56 PM on 05/06/2012
Yes, they can through Spaniards and Greeks in the street and simultaneously cruise Jupiter. They must think they're American.
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Scott Allie
Starving Philosopher
04:52 PM on 05/04/2012
It blows me away how few people see the importance of this. What is really exciting is the concept we are on the edge of commercial space flight.
We may just become a civilized race of beings yet. If more people chose to join the rest of the seekers on earth.
05:47 PM on 05/04/2012
It's a great thing about learning about the unknowns of our universe. :)
05:01 PM on 05/05/2012
We may not need space ships if we can just beam up . Check out this guy on HP and Facebook . Andrew Basiago . Everyone is talking about him and the World Press has picked up his story .
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Scott Allie
Starving Philosopher
07:40 PM on 05/05/2012
Thanks, I'll look him up now.
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ThaGovna
I walk on water, eat bullets, and poop ice cream.
12:14 PM on 05/04/2012
"The ambitious space mission, called the Jupiter Icy moons Explorer (JUICE)..."

What is not in this story is that they're sending Tupac along to get some "human" eyes on the moon.

Since he's an immortal zombie it made sense.
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French Toast
MAPLE SYRUP
03:06 AM on 05/05/2012
This is all dependent on whether or not the project gets Gridlock'd.
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Scott Allie
Starving Philosopher
09:50 PM on 05/07/2012
Bureaucracy tends to do that.
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VeryGrood
only class worse than micro-bio was molecular-bio
11:21 AM on 05/04/2012
And the US falls another step behind...
IndependentTogether
Forced left by the right
12:45 PM on 05/04/2012
The fact that other non-US agencies have their own missions does not diminish the importance of US missions. This is not a zero sum game.
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JWerner
Beware Macduff; beware the thane of Fife!
05:32 PM on 05/04/2012
Quit thinking in outdated nationalist terms.
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Scott Allie
Starving Philosopher
09:56 PM on 05/07/2012
We are citizens of the Earth after all, aren't we?
My utopia is a world without borders. A place where we all work together to build a future for our offspring. No need for war, or violence.
All we really need is education with the emphasis on objective reality.